Business The Blockbuster Games Bubble Has Burst - The AAA industry's survival may depend on smaller scale, creatively diverse games.

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The video game industry is currently in the thralls of a paradox. For players, it could be argued we’re in one of the greatest times for gaming – there’s incredible breadth of choice across consoles, handhelds and PCs made ever-more accessible through gaming subscription services like Xbox Game Pass and PlayStation Plus. But from an industry perspective, things could not be more dire. More and more studios seem to be closing, original IPs are being scrapped mid-development, and vast legions of game developers, programmers, artists, and animators have been cut loose. To put it simply: the AAA video game bubble has finally burst.

Across the past two years, over 23,000 jobs in the video game industry were lost, with a staggering 6,000 in January 2024 alone. Over 30 video game development studios have ceased operations including Arkane Austin, Volition, and most recently, Firewalk Studios. What’s worse, this trend only shows signs of continuing rather than diminishing. How did we get here? Some analysts have concluded these closures and redundancies are a necessary remedy to companies having overextended themselves in response to inflated demand in the market during the COVID-19 pandemic. While that’s undeniably a factor, I believe the truth lies in other long-gestating issues within the AAA project bubble.

Just five years ago, AAA projects’ average budget ranged $50 - $150 million. Today, the minimum average is $200 million. Call of Duty’s new benchmark is $300 million, with Activision admitting in the Competition & Market Authority’s report on AAA development that it now takes the efforts of one-and-a-half studios just to complete the annual Call of Duty title.

It’s far from just Call of Duty facing ballooning costs. In the same CMA report, an anonymous publisher admits that development costs for one of its franchises reached $660 million. With $550 million of marketing costs on top, that is a $1.2 billion game. To put that into perspective, Minecraft – the world’s best-selling video game of all time – has of last year only achieved $3 billion. It took 12 years to reach that figure, having launched in 2011.

The realities of these budgets mean entire publishing houses are massively overstretched and are now desperately facing the consequences: if their developers’ huge projects don’t make money immediately, they must die. Sega’s sci-fi shooter ‘super game’ Hyenas was in development at Creative Assembly for seven years, and – just as it was publicly playable for the first time via alpha testing – it was cancelled. The reason? Sega preemptively concluded Hyenas couldn’t make its money back.

Blizzard’s survival project Odyssey had a similar trajectory. Odyssey would’ve been the studio’s first new IP in eight years and, given the market’s love for games like Minecraft and Rust, such a gaming titan should’ve undoubtedly made waves with this project. When Microsoft acquired Activision Blizzard, the project was swiftly killed with little reason publicly given beyond inconveniences in switching engines to increase player count on the servers.

The current AAA publishing cull reflects a deep-rooted fear to engage with anything new and original.

These examples of the current AAA publishing cull reflect a deep-rooted fear to engage with anything new and original, with publishers perhaps more risk-averse than ever to stray out of their established IP safety bars. But even well-known IP that could be worth millions in sales and revenue is being left to rot. Despite owning Infamous, Jak & Daxter, Killzone, Resistance and Sly Cooper to name a few entries in PlayStations’s sprawling dormant library, Sony CFO Hiroki Totoki recently claimed the company lacks enough original IP to consolidate itself as a true gaming powerhouse.

What Totoki may mean is that Sony’s older catalogue of library IP does not fit the mould of what every publisher has been mindlessly chasing for the better part of the decade – the next big live-service money printer. It’s difficult to imagine much fanfare for a Sly Cooper reboot where Bentley and Murray are purchase-to-play, grand heists are season pass bonuses and worlds are delivered half-baked instead of fully formed. It’s undeniable that on some level, the video game market has changed forever because of the live-service model. New video games don’t just have to compete with new rivals but somehow find space in an increasingly crowded market dominated by decade-old titles like Fortnite and Grand Theft Auto: Online – games which will continue to hold higher player counts than many of the top-sold games of the last few years. But live-service titles require investment of not only money, but time to find their audience – neither of which was afforded to Firewalk Studios’ Concord.

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The crew of Concord's Northstar will never fly again.
Image credit: Sony / Firewalk Studios.


The recent fate of Concord’s Firewalk Studios serves as a microcosm for the increasingly bleak outlook for the next few years in video game development. Concord was Firewalk’s first game, its baby in many ways. An eight-year development bolstered by a Sony acquisition (with a reported cash injection of $200 million plus), PlayStation reportedly believed it had the next Star Wars-esque franchise on its hands. But the game struggled significantly across both its beta testing period and launch, and was soon completely shut down by Sony, with Firewalk closed for business shortly after. Concord’s downfall happened faster than any other failed game of the live-service era.

Just a decade earlier, though, a similar disaster was plaguing Blizzard’s Diablo 3 – the crippling ‘Error 37’ message made the game unplayable and fans worldwide decried the absolute failure to launch. Soon after, the game’s real-money auction house left players with a foul taste in their mouth and Diablo 3’s reputation was roasting in the fires. But rather than abandoning it, Blizzard not only repaired the game and removed the Auction House, but fundamentally upgraded and evolved it to Diablo 3 2.0 with its Reaper of Souls expansion, finally cementing its comeback as a brilliant game. It’s a similar story we’ve seen with CD Projekt Red’s hard-fought battle to win Cyberpunk 2077 fans back.

If the alleged $200 million + budget had been lowered, the project direction refocused as a spark for a new universe rather than a Big Bang, it doesn’t seem hard to believe that Concord may have found its audience with some Blizzard or CDPR-like shepherding from Sony. Many projects akin to Concord could be the medium-size successes they deserve to be, if not for the financial corners these publishers have found themselves backed into.

If everything is ‘bigger and bolder’, who possibly has the time to play more than one or two games each year?

Not that such financial corners are anything publishers should always attempt to navigate. Gamers are beginning to wane interest in these monolithic projects. You need only look at a top rated games of 2024 list – whereas 2023 award lists were littered with AAA titles from 500-strong studios, 2024’s show a revitalised hunger for a smaller, more independent spirit. Arcade machine throwback UFO 50, the Metroidvania-esque Animal Well, poker roguelite Balatro, and text-based pixel-art adventure The Crimson Diamond are just some of the games you’ll see appearing again and again on these lists. Despite their numerous differences, they share a commonality – a smaller, more refined experience that recalls earlier eras of gaming where marriages of mechanics and storytelling were key through technological craftiness, rather than literal country-sized game worlds. The nostalgia they create for older video game generations are central to the heart of their creation: they just want you to pick them up and have a good time now and again. The slow but increasingly clear pivot of video game audiences to a potential indie game renaissance is a clear message to publishers that if everything is ‘bigger and bolder’, who possibly has the time to play more than one or two games each year?

That’s not to undercut the difficulty in getting those independent titles made. UFO 50’s Mossmouth LLC team consisted of six developers working over many years, while both Animal Well and The Crimson Diamond share similar stories of being crafted by solo developers - Billy Basso and Julia Minamata, respectively – over several years. Even a smash-hit like Lethal Company started life as one-man-band developer Zeekerss learning to develop games on Roblox before expanding his knowledge. All of these developers put everything they had over several years of their lives into creating these games – not in pursuit of money, but because of a passion. That’s why they don’t need humongous worlds or 300+ side-quests to tick off – these games all feel like lean enjoyment machines.

It feels like the top-end of the video game industry is currently faced with two paths to choose from. The first is the status quo; it can continue to engorge on bigger budgets with impossibly-open-yet-incredibly-empty worlds filled with 80+ hours of content that has about 10 hours of meaning to its players, or hopelessly pursue the live-service train which left the station over 5 years ago, with late passengers wondering why the money isn’t rolling anymore. These billion-dollar gambles could pay off, but it’s becoming less and less likely. Or, they could opt for the second path and take a page out of Julia Minamata, Billy Basso and Zeekerss’ books – a wider breadth of projects, smaller in scope and scale with a refined focus on gameplay mechanics, and perhaps a return to older styles of video games long-dormant. Projects where developers aren’t afraid to take weirder choices and unexpected left-turns lest they crash their $400 million ship into a ‘mixed-to-decent’ initial reception.

Maybe studios can remember that we used to play video games because they were fun – not because of their bigger-than-last-year maps carpeted by denser, higher-resolution grass that you walk across to finish another piece of side content that pushes you one digit closer to 100% completion.

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t could be argued we’re in one of the greatest times for gaming
No. We could be, but AAA publishers keep fagging everything up for some reason even though it's been proven time and time again no one wants politics and gender blob bullshit to be the focus of any game. Not saying it cannot be there, but it should not be the main focus.

Western studios hire people unfit for the job, mentally ill gender-specials, ideologically poisoned individuals and white women with no talent.
Let's not forget hiring consulting firms that actively hate the audience like Sweet Baby Inc.
 
Are these any good? I’ve heard a lot good things about them but I’m very much turned off by RPG Maker games. If they’re -that- good, I’d be willing to try.
The first one, yes. It's, however, substantially learn-by-dying "unfair": you think you got it, advance a bit further, get raped, rinse, repeat.

The second has a troon in it (an actual troon, an adult human male with a dick pretending to be a woman) that's not used for horror and the game respects its pronouns and awards it a happy ending and a schoolgirl-lesbian girlfriend.
 
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They've got the cause and effect backwards.

AAA games are made to push hardware which is increasingly more expensive (£700 PS5pro and £500, four-year-old PS5) because it's full of unnecessary shite. Console gamers don't need 4k or ray tracing; those bells and whistles were once the trademark of PC, which was renowned for it's expensive, powerful hardware.

For some retarded reason, MS and Sony have made closed-off PC's, then tried to make expensive, often shitty AAA games which, to earn back maximum revenue, must tick all of the diversity, rogue-like, battle-royal, hero-shooter, MTX tickboxes. That's how we ended up with concord.

The problem the AAA industry is facing would evaporate overnight if Microsoft or Sony released a 1080p or 1440p machine, which tard-wrangled devs with power constraints, forcing them to invent new ways of making games, rather than the unoptimised, generic slop with a 4k-sheen that we're fed today.


TL;DR - make cheap consoles to filter shit devs who can't optimise by reducing the hardware in consoles. Let PC's be the high end again
 
Let's not forget hiring consulting firms that actively hate the audience like Sweet Baby Inc.
For all intents and purposes, it's basically the same thing. Apparently, sometimes they feel like the game isn't pozzed enough on its own and they have to outsource it. The problem stems from developer/publisher either way.
 
Bring back AA studios. I want some developers with just a little more resources than indies but also not a 500 person team stretched across three continents that make nothing but slop.
Hiring competent people and keeping budgets realistic by not splurging on globohomo consulting?

What are you some sort of bigot?
 
The first one, yes. It's, however, substantially learn-by-dying "unfair": you think you got it, advance a bit further, get raped, rinse, repeat.

The second has a troon in it (an actual troon, an adult human male with a dick pretending to be a woman) that's not used for horror and the game respects its pronouns and awards it a happy ending and a schoolgirl-lesbian girlfriend.
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Hylics 1+2 remains the best games to come out of RPGMaker. The sheer balls to make a game using CLAYMATION is crazy lol
 
AAA companies deserve to go under after all that they've done. Games need to go back to its commando esque roots ala the 80s and 90s. It was around those times when Blizzard was doing cool shit like Rock and Roll Racing and then made a break with Warcraft 2.

Of course, TPTB is going to try and fucking with this ecosystem because they want to control the narrative and ultimately the minds of people. Just look at their propaganda pieces like Dustborn and Goodbye Volcano High (Which got bent over by a shitpost version of it).

Since we're on the Indie bend, a few recommendations.
-Kenshi
-Star Sector
-Factorio
-Xenonauts

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Hylics 1+2 remains the best games to come out of RPGMaker. The sheer balls to make a game using CLAYMATION is crazy lol
Has a kickass soundtrack to boot!

 
Space Marine 2 moved 4.5 million units. You can still make AAA games, you just have to make them 1. Not gay 2. Good.

It's not rocket science. Quit chasing trends and DEI. Make a game worth playing.

Now please pay me 6 figures for this brilliant consulting.
Don't forget Astro Bot came out the same time too and also made way more than they thought it would and topped the charts on its release. Just a fun, cute platformer with nods to previous Sony games and franchises.
 
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